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Temozolomide down-regulates P-glycoprotein in human blood–brain barrier cells by disrupting Wnt3 signaling
Authors:Chiara Riganti  Iris C Salaroglio  Martha L Pinzòn-Daza  Valentina Caldera  Ivana Campia  Joanna Kopecka  Marta Mellai  Laura Annovazzi  Pierre-Olivier Couraud  Amalia Bosia  Dario Ghigo  Davide Schiffer
Institution:1. Department of Oncology, University of Turin, Via Santena, 5/bis, 10126, Turin, Italy
2. Research Center On Experimental Medicine (CeRMS), University of Turin, Via Santena, 5/bis, 10126, Turin, Italy
3. Unidad de Bioquímica, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Matemáticas, Universidad del Rosario, Carrera 6, Bogotá, Colombia
4. Neuro-bio-oncology Center, Policlinico di Monza Foundation, Via Pietro Micca 29, 13100, Vercelli, Italy
5. Institut Cochin, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique UMR 8104, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U567, Université René Descartes, 22 rue Méchain, 75014, Paris, France
Abstract:Low delivery of many anticancer drugs across the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is a limitation to the success of chemotherapy in glioblastoma. This is because of the high levels of ATP-binding cassette transporters like P-glycoprotein (Pgp/ABCB1), which effluxes drugs back to the bloodstream. Temozolomide is one of the few agents able to cross the BBB; its effects on BBB cells permeability and Pgp activity are not known. We found that temozolomide, at therapeutic concentration, increased the transport of Pgp substrates across human brain microvascular endothelial cells and decreased the expression of Pgp. By methylating the promoter of Wnt3 gene, temozolomide lowers the endogenous synthesis of Wnt3 in BBB cells, disrupts the Wnt3/glycogen synthase kinase 3/β-catenin signaling, and reduces the binding of β-catenin on the promoter of mdr1 gene, which encodes for Pgp. In co-culture models of BBB cells and human glioblastoma cells, pre-treatment with temozolomide increases the delivery, cytotoxicity, and antiproliferative effects of doxorubicin, vinblastine, and topotecan, three substrates of Pgp that are usually poorly delivered across BBB. Our work suggests that temozolomide increases the BBB permeability of drugs that are normally effluxed by Pgp back to the bloodstream. These findings may pave the way to new combinatorial chemotherapy schemes in glioblastoma.
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